This dataset contains road collisions in Camden dating back to 2005. Data is provided by TfL (Transport for London) on an annual basis in three parts – this is the casualties part; some information has been added from the attendants part. Attendants and vehicles are available on the open data platform as separate datasets and they can all be joined together using the Reference column. If joined, where multiple attendants/casualties/vehicles exists for one Accident Reference there will be multiple records for the same accident. To avoid anomalies it is suggested any data analysis undertaken should use three years of data.

This dataset contains road collisions in Camden dating back to 2005. Data is provided by TfL (Transport for London) on an annual basis in three parts – this is the casualties part, attendants and vehicles are available on the open data platform as separate datasets and they can all be joined together using the Reference column. If joined, where multiple attendants/casualties/vehicles exists for one Accident Reference there will be multiple records for the same accident. To avoid anomalies it is suggested any data analysis undertaken should use three years of data.

This dataset contains road collisions in Camden dating back to 2005. Data is provided by TfL (Transport for London) on an annual basis in three parts – this is the casualties part, attendants and vehicles are available on the open data platform as separate datasets and they can all be joined together using the Reference column. If joined, where multiple attendants/casualties/vehicles exists for one Accident Reference there will be multiple records for the same accident. To avoid anomalies it is suggested any data analysis undertaken should use three years of data.

This dataset contains road collisions in Camden dating back to 2005. Data is provided by TfL (Transport for London) on an annual basis in three parts – this is the casualties part; some information has been added from the attendants part. Attendants and vehicles are available on the open data platform as separate datasets and they can all be joined together using the Reference column. If joined, where multiple attendants/casualties/vehicles exists for one Accident Reference there will be multiple records for the same accident. To avoid anomalies it is suggested any data analysis undertaken should use three years of data.

This dataset contains road collisions in Camden dating back to 2005. Data is provided by TfL (Transport for London) on an annual basis in three parts – this is the casualties part; some information has been added from the attendants part. Attendants and vehicles are available on the open data platform as separate datasets and they can all be joined together using the Reference column. If joined, where multiple attendants/casualties/vehicles exists for one Accident Reference there will be multiple records for the same accident. To avoid anomalies it is suggested any data analysis undertaken should use three years of data.

This dataset contains road collisions in Camden dating back to 2005. Data is provided by TfL (Transport for London) on an annual basis in three parts – this is the casualties part, attendants and vehicles are available on the open data platform as separate datasets and they can all be joined together using the Reference column. If joined, where multiple attendants/casualties/vehicles exists for one Accident Reference there will be multiple records for the same accident. To avoid anomalies it is suggested any data analysis undertaken should use three years of data.

This dataset contains road collisions in Camden dating back to 2005. Data is provided by TfL (Transport for London) on an annual basis in three parts – this is the casualties part, attendants and vehicles are available on the open data platform as separate datasets and they can all be joined together using the Reference column. If joined, where multiple attendants/casualties/vehicles exists for one Accident Reference there will be multiple records for the same accident. To avoid anomalies it is suggested any data analysis undertaken should use three years of data.

This dataset contains road collisions in Camden dating back to 2005. Data is provided by TfL (Transport for London) on an annual basis in three parts – this is the casualties part, attendants and vehicles are available on the open data platform as separate datasets and they can all be joined together using the Reference column. If joined, where multiple attendants/casualties/vehicles exists for one Accident Reference there will be multiple records for the same accident. To avoid anomalies it is suggested any data analysis undertaken should use three years of data.

This dataset contains road collisions in Camden dating back to 2005. Data is provided by TfL (Transport for London) on an annual basis in three parts – this is the vehicles part; some information has been added from the attendants part. Attendants and casualties are available on the open data platform as separate datasets and they can all be joined together using the Reference column. If joined, where multiple attendants/casualties/vehicles exists for one Accident Reference there will be multiple records for the same accident. To avoid anomalies it is suggested any data analysis undertaken should use three years of data.

This dataset contains road collisions in Camden dating back to 2005. Data is provided by TfL (Transport for London) on an annual basis in three parts – this is the casualties part, attendants and vehicles are available on the open data platform as separate datasets and they can all be joined together using the Reference column. If joined, where multiple attendants/casualties/vehicles exists for one Accident Reference there will be multiple records for the same accident. To avoid anomalies it is suggested any data analysis undertaken should use three years of data.